A week from this coming Sunday at SXSW, I’ll be interviewing Sundar Pichai, Google’s Senior Vice President, Android, Chrome & Apps. Pichai has a huge job at Google, overseeing the company’s mobile ecosystem, from hardware (the Nexus platform) to the burgeoning Play store (oh, and that little browser/OS called Chrome, to boot). Last year, he took over Android from its founder Andy Rubin, who has moved his focus to new (and currently undisclosed) Google moonshots. Android is a huge business for Google – more than a billion devices have been activated since its inception. And that’s well before markets for autos, wearables, and enterprise heat up.

The interview is in classic SXSW keynote form – just us on stage, with a room of 1,000 or so attendees from the festival’s interactive track. On a prep call last week, Sundar mentioned he’d be up for hearing from readers here and on various social networks, so I’m issuing a call: What questions do you have for the man in charge of Google’s mobile future? A few that come to mind:

– What is Android’s role beyond phones & tablets? Pichai has said Android is moving into areas such as the enterprise, wearables, and automobiles. How might that play out? Will Nest become an Android device? Will you have to join Google+ to manage your thermostat?!

– What is the future of the Nexus effort – is Google committed to being a hardware player, or is the Nexus line mainly a way to show off how best to create devices? Related – what happened with Motorola? Was that a mistake, or part of a master plan?

– How do Chromebooks and the Chrome OS fit into Google’s future? How do we think about Chrome as separate from Android?

– Chromecast, Google Fiber, Play, YouTube: All seem positioned to combat the Comcasts of the world. What’s Google’s POV on cord cutting and the cablecos?
Might Google up and buy sports rights?

What questions do you have for Pichai? Leave a comment here, or tweet them to me @johnbattelle. Hope to see you at SXSW!

Google is, above all, a search company, in the broadest sense. Maps, Google Now, Google Earth, etc. How do Chrome OS and Chromebooks — sometimes seen as a simple land grab, a way to increase people’s reliance on Google — fit into the larger ethos?

1) When will the Nexus 10 2 (or Nexus 10 2014) be released?
2) Why doesn’t Google force manufactures to ship their devices with stock android? I don’t like any of their skins like touchwiz, and they slow every device down. Just look at Samsung’s new Magazine UX, it’s awful
3) When will Google Play Devices, Google Play Movies, Magazine etc. come to South Africa?

I wish they do this for android:-Voice call
-Voice message
-Status (Online, away, busy and offline)
-timestamp last seen
-Google voice
-draw messages
-join sms and hangouts message in one thread
-block people

How much consultation/participation is sought from external developers when new Android versions are launched?Google Play Services?Fixing security bugs without version update?Combating WhatsApp+Facebook on mobile?Google Glass and Android?

Question: With Android, iOS and WP being more and more available worldwide, what is the plan for services like Google Play Music and Google Wallet being available outside of the US? Why does it seem that iOS and WP are able to release things like XBOX music or Passport / iTunes radio in places like Canada, while Android users are completely cut off from Play Music and Wallet and Voice in Canada and other countries? Are the “US only, at launch” releases going to change sometime soon? Thank you.

Why don’t you fight against Microsoft patent blackmailing? Microsoft earns more money from Android than Google. Why don’t you create an Android alliance and cancel all the licences with Microsoft? The world tends to be cancelling all the abusive patents keeping progress behind.

1. Please explain us in detail, why does the Google Services (Music, Books, Movie, Magazine) are different in many countries? I love Android, but this is a downside for me..

2. What happened with nexus 10? Is there any Nexus devices that Google will launch this year?

3. I live in South East Asia and everytime a Nexus device launched, I must wait for approximately 3 month(Nexus 5 launched here on January 2014) for Nexus phones and 6month++ for a Nexus tablet(Nexus 10 still don’t have any information, Nexus 7 (2013) launched on end-february 2014!). How long is the Nexus-selling-lifecycle (from launched one Nexus to the new one, especially tablets)?

With Sprint adding Wifi calling, are you (for the love of all things holy) going to put wifi calling back into your Nexus line – starting with the Nexus 6? My Galaxy Nexus is getting old – but stuck until I have wifi calling to upgrade to.